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18th century

[edit]

1763

1767

  • Thomas Erskine – Quartet No. 8 in C minor, Quartet No. 9 in A (recorded, Meridian)

1769

1772 (Haydn, op. 20 Quartets, Nos. 1-6)

  • John Marsh – Quartet in Bb (his only surviving quartet)

1775

  • Carl Friedrich Abel – Quartets, op. 12 Nos. 1-6

1776

1779

1780

  • Carl Friedrich Abel – Quartets, op. 15, Nos. 1-6
  • Samuel Wesley – Quartet in C, 1779-80

1781 (Haydn, op. 33 Quartets, Nos. 1-6)

1782

1785 (Mozart, “Haydn” Quartets, Nos. 14-19)
1786 (Mozart, Quartet No. 20, K499)
1787 (Haydn, op. 50 Quartets, Nos. 1-6)
1788 (Haydn, op. 54 Quartets, Nos. 1-3 and op. 55, Nos. 1-3)
1789 (Mozart, Quartet No. 21, K575)
1790 (Haydn, op. 64 Quartets, Nos. 1-6; Mozart, No. 22, K589; No. 23, K590)
1793 (Haydn, op. 71 Quartets, Nos. 1-3 and op. 74, Nos. 1-3)
1797 (Haydn, op. 76 Quartets, Nos. 1-6)
1799 (Haydn, op. 77 Quartets, Nos. 1-2)

1800 (Beethoven, op. 18 Quartets, Nos. 1-6)

  • Samuel Wesley – Quartets in Bb (fugue) and Eb

19th century

[edit]

1806 (Beethoven, op. 59, Nos. 1-3 “Razumovsky Quartets”)

1807

  • Samuel Wesley – Quartet in C (Minuet and Trio)

1809 (Beethoven, op. 74 “Harp Quartet”)
1810 (Beethoven, op. 95 “Serioso Quartet”)

1812

1816

1820

  • Samuel Wesley – Quartet in Eb

1824 (Schubert, Quartet No. 13, D804; No. 14 D810, “Death and the Maiden”)
1825 (Beethoven, Quartets op. 127 and op. 132)
1826 (Beethoven, Quartets op. 130, op. 131, op. 133 “Grosse Fuge”, op. 135. Schubert, Quartet No. 15, D887)

1823

1827

1831

1834

1837

1838 (Mendelssohn, op. 44 Quartets, Nos. 1-3)

1842 (Schumann, op. 41 Quartets, Nos. 1-3)

  • George Alexander Macfarren – Quartet No. 3 in A

1846

  • Kate Loder – Quartet in Gminor
  • George Alexander Macfarren – Quartet in F, op. 54 (pub. Leipzig, 1846)

1847 (Mendelssohn, Quartet, op. 80)

  • Kate Loder – Quartet in E minor

1850

1851

1852

  • John Lodge Ellerton – Quartet, op. 122[4]
  • George Alexander Macfarren – Quartet No. 5 in G minor (1846-52)

1859 (Brahms, Quartet No. 1, op. 51)

1860

1862

1867

1868

1870

  • Alice Mary Smith – Quartet No. 2

1873 (Brahms, Quartet No. 2, op. 51)
1874 (Tchaikovsky, Quartet, op. 22)
1875 (Brahms, Quartet No. 3, op. 67)
1876 (Smetana, Quartet No. 1, “From my Life,”)
1877 (Grieg, Quartet op. 27)

1878

  • George Alexander Macfarren – Quartet No 6 in G
  • Hubert Parry – Quartet No. 3 in G
  • Ethel Smyth – Quartet No. 1 in A minor

1880

  • Ethel Smyth – Quartet No. 1 in D minor

1881

  • Ebenezer Prout – Quartet No. 2 (c1881)

1883

  • Ethel Smyth – Quartet in C minor

1884

1885

1886

1887 (Borodin, Quartet No. 2)

1888

1889 (Franck, Quartet in D major)

1890

1891

1892

  • Charles Wood – Quartet No. 2 in Eb, Highgate

1893 (Debussy, Quartet, op. 10; Dvorak, Quartet No. 12, op. 96, "American")

  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 1 in F
  • Frederick Delius – Quartet (unnumbered, his second)
  • Eugen d’Albert – Quartet No 2 in Eb, op 11
  • Charles Wood – Quartet in Eb

1895

1897

  • John Ireland – Quartet in Cm
  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 3 in D minor, op. 64
  • Alfred Wall - Quartet in G

1898

  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 2 in A minor (pub. 1903)
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams – Quartet in C minor (1897-8)

1899

1900

20th century (1901-1950)

[edit]

1901

  • Frank Bridge – Quartet in E minor (unnumbered)
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 3 in E minor

1902

  • Percy Hilder MilesThree Phantasy Pieces for string quartet
  • Cyril Rootham – Quartet in G minor
  • Ethel Smyth – Quartet in E minor
  • Richard Walthew – Quartet No. 2 in B flat

1903 (Ravel, Quartet in F)

  • John Foulds – Quartet No. 6, Quartetto Romantico
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet, op. 31 in F

1904

  • Cyril Scott – Quartet, op. 28

1905 (Schoenberg, Quartet No. 1, op. 7)

  • Henry Balfour Gardiner – Quartet in one movement
  • William HurlstonePhantasie Quartet in A minor
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet in C Minor (No. 4)
  • Cyril Rootham – Phantasy Quartet in D minor (Capriccio)
  • Haydn WoodPhantasie Quartet in F

1906

  • Frank Bridge – Quartet No. 1 in E minor
  • John Foulds – Quartet No. 7 (lost)
  • Joseph HolbrookeFantasy Quartet No. 1, op. 17

1907

  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 4 in G minor, op. 99

1908 (Schoenberg, Quartet No. 2)

  • Cyril Rootham – Quartet in D major
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet, op. 28
  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 5 in Bb major, op. 104
  • Harry Waldo Warner – Phantasie Quartet No. 1
  • Vaughan Williams – Quartet in G minor (rev. 1921)

1909

1910

  • John Foulds – Quartet No. 8, op. 23 (1907-10)
  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 6, op. 122

1911 (Bartok, Quartet No. 1)

  • Edgar Bainton – Quartet, op. 26 (lost)
  • Charles Wood – Quartet nos. 3 in A minor (1911-12)

1912

  • Bernard van Dieren – Quartet No. 1
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet No. 1 in C, op. 1
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 5 (Nugae, 7 Bagatelles)
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 6 in A (Biscay)
  • Dame Ethyl Smyth – Quartet in E minor (1902-12)
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 1, op. 14
  • Charles Wood – Quartet No. 4 in Eb, Harrogate

1913

1914

  • Frank Bridge – Quartet No. 1 in G minor
  • Cyril Rootham – Quartet in C
  • Ethel Smyth – Quartet in E minor
  • Susan Spain-Dunk – Quartet in B flat minor

1915

  • Arthur Bliss – Quartet in A
  • Frank Bridge – Quartet No. 2 in G minor (fp. Aeolian Hall, Nov 15)
  • Eugene Goossens – Quartet No. 1 in C, op. 14
  • Joseph Holbrooke – Quartet No. 2, op. 59a, War Impressions
  • Herbert HowellsLady Audrey’s Suite, op. 19
  • William Henry Reed – Quartet No. 5 in A minor (1915, pub. 1916)[5]
  • Susan Spain-Dunk – Phantasy Quartet in D minor
  • Charles Wood – Quartet No. 5 in F major (1914-15)

1916

  • Frederick Delius – Quartet No. 3 in E minor, Late Swallows
  • Hans Gál – Quartet No. 1 in F minor, op. 16
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartets, op. 6, op. 7
  • Joseph Holbrooke – Quartet No. 3, op. 68, The Pickwick Club; Quartet No. 4, op. 71
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 7, Threnody
  • Albert SammonsPhantasy Quartet, op. 8
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 2, op. 20
  • Charles Wood – Quartet No. 6 in D major (1915-16)

1917

  • Bernard van Dieren – Quartet No. 2, op. 9
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in A minor, op. 8
  • Joseph Holbrooke – Quartet No. 5, op. 72, Song and Dance
  • Herbert Howells – Phantasy Quartet, op. 25 (1917 Cobbett prize winner)
  • Richard Walthew – Quartet No. 3 in E flat
  • Charles Wood – Quartet No. 7

1918

  • Arnold Bax – Quartet No. 1 in G
  • York Bowen – Quartet No. 2 in D minor, op. 41 (Naxos recording)
  • Edric Cundell – Quartet, op. 18
  • Edward Elgar – Quartet in E minor, op. 83
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet No. 3 in E minor, op. 18
  • Joseph Holbrooke – Quartet No. 6, op. 73
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 8 in Eb
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 3, op. 25

1919

  • Edgar Bainton – Quartet No. 2 in A
  • York Bowen – Quartet No. 3 in G, op. 46 (Naxos recording)
  • Bernard van Dieren – Quartet No. 3, op. 15
  • Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in F sharp minor, op. 22
  • Armstrong Gibbs – Pastoral Quartet, op. 41
  • Herbert Howells – Quartet No. 3, In Gloucestershire (1st version lost, 1916)
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet No. 1 (Jan 30, 1919, Steinway Hall)
  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 7 in C minor, op. 166
  • Charles Villiers Stanford – Quartet No. 8 in E minor, op. 167

1920

  • Herbert Griffiths – Quartet
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 9 in B minor
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 10, The Jocund Dance
  • E J Moeran – Quartet No. 2 in Eb (circa 1918-20 pub. posthumously)
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 4, op. 28

1921 (Hindemith - Quartet No. 3)

  • Gordon Jacob – Quartet in B minor (first movement only)
  • Ethel LeginskaQuatuor à cordes, after four poems by Tagore
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet in E minor
  • E J Moeran – Quartet (No. 1) in A minor
  • Harry Waldo Warner – Phantasie Quartet (No. 2) in D (pub. 1920)

1922

1923

  • Arthur Benjamin – Quartet No. 1`
  • Rutland Boughton – Quartet in A major On Greek Folk Songs
  • Rutland Boughton – Quartet in F major, From the Welsh Hills
  • Alan Bush – Quartet in A minor, op. 4
  • Bernard van Dieren – Quartet No. 4, op.16
  • Eric Fogg – Quartet in Ab (1922-3, pub. 1925)
  • Norman Fraser – Quartet
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet No. 12 (Suite of Old National Dances)
  • Eva Ruth Spalding – Quartet No. 1
  • Ernest Walker – Fantasia in D major for string quartet, op. 32

1924 (Faure, Quartet in E minor, op. 121)

1925

  • Arnold Bax – Quartet No. 2 in E minor
  • Christian Darnton – Quartet No 1, op. 23 (1924-5, fp. 1927)
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 3, op. 25

1926 (Berg, Lyric Suite)

1927 (Schoenberg – Quartet No. 3, op. 30)

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 6 in E minor
  • Frank Bridge – Quartet No. 3
  • Bernard van Dieren – Quartet No. 6
  • Harry Farjeon – Quartet No. 4 in C major, op. 65
  • Armstrong Gibbs – Three Pieces for String Quartet

1928 (Janacek – Quartet No. 2, 'Intimate Letters')

  • Guirne Creith – Quartet (broadcast 24/11/28)
  • Imogen HolstPhantasy Quartet (Proms, 2013)
  • Gordon Jacob – Quartet No. 1 in C
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet in C minor (No. 13)
  • Eva Ruth Spalding – Quartet No. 2

1929

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 7 in A
  • Eric Fogg – Quartet No. 3
  • Hans Gal – Quartet No. 2 in A minor
  • Charles Wood – Quartet in F major
  • Charles Wood – Quartet in D major

1930

1931

1932

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 10 En Voyage (1932)
  • Aloys Fleischmann – Movement for String Quartet (between 1927 and 1932)
  • John Foulds – Quartet No. 9 – Quartetto Intimo
  • Helen Glatz – Quartet No. 1

1933

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 11 in B minor (1933)
  • Granville BantockIn a Chinese Mirror
  • Arnold Cooke – Quartet No. 1
  • Edric Cundell – Quartet in C, op. 27
  • Marie Dare - Phantasy Quartet in one movement
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in A major
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs Miniature Quartet, op. 74
  • Dorothy Gow – Quartet No. 2
  • Theodore Holland – Quartet in C minor

1934 (Bartok – Quartet No. 5)

  • Adam Carse – Miniature Quartet in A minor
  • Christian Darnton – Quartet No. 3
  • Mary Lucas – Quartet No. 1 (? – fp.)
  • Edmund Rubbra – Quartet No. 1 in F minor, op. 35 (rev. 1946)

1935

  • William Alwyn – Fantasia (Quartet No. 12) (1935)
  • Lennox Berkeley – Quartet No. 1, op. 6
  • Christian Darnton – Quartet No. 5
  • John Foulds – Quartet No. 10 Quartetto Geniale (sketches only survive)
  • Mary Lucas – Quartet No. 2 (? – fp.)
  • Alan Rawsthorne – Quartet for Strings
  • Matyas Seiber – Quartet No. 2
  • Michael Tippett – Quartet No. 1 in A major (rev. 1943)
  • Felix Harold White – Quartet (Lyra Quartet, BBC broadcast)

1936 (Samuel Barber – Quartet, op. 11; Schoenberg – Quartet No. 4, op. 37)

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 13 (1936)
  • Stanley Bate – Quartet No. 1
  • Helen Glatz – Quartet No. 2
  • Inglis GundryPhantasy Quartet (winner of Cobbett prize)
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartet in D minor (No. 14)
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Little Quartet (No. 15) (in modo Scotico)
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Quartette Provencale, No. 16
  • Frederick May – Quartet in C Minor

1937

  • Arnold Bax – Quartet No. 3 in F major
  • Frank Bridge – Quartet No. 4 (H188)
  • Marie Dare – Quartet in G minor (1934-37)
  • Elisabeth Lutyens – Quartet No. 1, op. 5 no.1 (withdrawn)
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 2

1938 (Anton Webern – Quartet, op. 28)

  • Theodore Holland – Quartet in E minor
  • Mary Lucas – Quartet No. 3 (? – fp.)
  • Elisabeth Lutyens – Quartet No. 2, op. 5 no.5
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 3
  • Eleanor Rudall – Two Quartets performed[6]

1939

1940

  • Arthur Bliss – Quartet No. 1 in Bb major (No. 1 – but see 2 earlier unnumbered)

1941

1942

  • Richard Arnell – Quartet No. 2
  • Stanley Bate – Quartet No. 2, op. 41, 1942
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in C, op. 95
  • Eugene Goossens – Quartet No. 2, op. 59
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 1, op. 1 (in one mvt)
  • Michael Tippett – Quartet No. 2 in F Sharp major

1943

  • George Linstead – Quartet No. 2 (rev. 1949)
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 4
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 2, op. 3
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 5, op. 60

1944

1945

  • Richard Arnell – Quartet No. 3
  • Benjamin Britten – Quartet No. 2 in C major, op. 36
  • Doreen Carwithen – Quartet No. 1 (fp. 1948)
  • Arnold Cooke – Variations on an Original Theme for String Quartet
  • Benjamin Frankel – Quartet No. 2
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 3
  • Michael Tippett – Quartet No. 3
  • Harold Truscott – Quartet (No. 2)

1946 (Shostakovich – Quartet No 3 in F major, op 73)

1947

  • Arnold Cooke – Quartet No. 2
  • Dorothy Gow – Quartet in One Movement
  • Benjamin Frankel – Quartet No. 3
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in C, op. 118
  • John Blackwood McEwen – Fantasia Quartet, No. 17
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 4
  • William Walton – Quartet No. 2 in A minor

1948

  • William Alwyn – Three Winter Poems for string quartet
  • Stephen Dodgson – Fantasy Quartet
  • Benjamin Frankel – Quartet No. 4
  • Joseph Horovitz – Quartet No. 3
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 5
  • Robert Still – Quartet No. 1 in A minor
  • Ralph Walter Wood (1902-1957) – Quartet No. 2
  • William Wordsworth – Quartet No. 3, op. 30
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 7, op. 66

1949

  • Malcolm Arnold – Quartet No.1, op. 23
  • Brian Boydell – Quartet No. 1, op. 31
  • Robert Crawford (1925-2012) – Quartet No. 1, op. 4 (fp. ISCM, Frankfurt, 1951)
  • Peter Racine Fricker – Quartet No. 1, op. 8 (1948-9)
  • Imogen Holst – Quartet No. 2
  • Elisabeth Lutyens – Quartet No. 3, op. 18
  • Franz Reizenstein – Divertimento for string quartet
  • Bernard StevensTheme & Variations for String Quartet, op. 11
  • David Wynne – Quartet No. 2

1950

  • Richard Arnell – Quartet No. 4
  • Arthur Bliss – Quartet No. 2
  • Doreen Carwithen – Quartet No. 2
  • Norman Demuth – Quartet
  • John Joubert – Quartet No. 1
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 6
  • Eva Ruth Spalding – Quartet No. 5
  • William Wordsworth – Quartet No. 4

20th century (1951-2000)

[edit]

1951

  • Robert Crawford – Quartet No. 2, op. 8 (fp. 1956?)
  • Karel Janovický – Quartet (No. 1?)
  • Edmund Rubbra – Quartet No. 2 in E flat, Op.73
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet No. 2
  • Matyas Seiber – Quartet No. 3, Quartetto Lirico

1952

  • Richard Arnell – Quartet No. 5
  • Francis Burt – Quartet No. 1 (1951-1952)
  • Doreen Carwithen – Quartet No. 2
  • Iain Hamilton – Quartet No. 1, op. 5 (by 1952)
  • David Harries – Introduction and Allegro for string quartet, op. 1
  • Elizabeth Lutyens – Quartet No. 5
  • Elizabeth Lutyens – Quartet No. 6, op. 25
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 5 (rev. 1995)
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 6
  • Robert Simpson – Quartet No. 1
  • Leopold Spinner – Quartet No. 2, op. 7
  • Phyllis Tate – Quartet (rev. 1982 as Movements for String Quartet)

1953

  • William Alwyn – Quartet No. 1 in D minor
  • Stephen Dodgson – Quartet in B minor
  • Carlo Martelli – Quartet No. 1
  • Robert Simpson – Quartet No. 2
  • Joseph Horovitz Quartet No. 4

1954

  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – A Simple String Quartet, op. 140
  • David Harries – Quartet No. 1
  • Carlo Martelli – Quartet No. 2
  • Roy Heaton Smith – Quartet, op. 34 (1951/4)
  • Wilfred Josephs – Quartet No. 1, op. 6
  • Alan Rawsthorne – Quartet No. 2
  • * Robert Simpson – Quartet No. 3
  • Thomas Wilson – Quartet No. 2

1955

  • Ian Parrott – Quartet No. 2
  • Ian Whyte – Quartet No. 3

1956

1957

  • Richard Rodney Bennett – Quartet No. 3
  • Brian Boydell – Quartet No. 2, op. 44
  • Alexander Goehr – Quartet No. 1
  • Daniel Jones – Quartet No. 2
  • Kenneth Leighton – Quartet No. 2, op. 33
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 7
  • Ian Parrott – Quartet No. 3
  • Hugh Wood – Quartet in Bb
  • Ralph Walter Wood – Quartet No. 3
  • William Wordsworth – Quartet No. 5
  • Egon Wellesz – Quartet No. 8, op. 79

1958

  • Peter Dickinson – Quartet No.1 (rev. 1974)
  • Cecil Armstrong Gibbs – Quartet in E minor
  • Thea Musgrave – Quartet No. 1
  • Thomas Wilson – Quartet No. 3, op. 21 (McEwen Composition Prize)
  • Wilfred Josephs – Quartet No. 2, op. 17 (1957-8)

1959

  • Arthur Benjamin – Quartet No.2 (composed 1952, rev. 1956, pub. 1959).
  • Stephen Dodgson – Quartet in F minor
  • Karel Janovický – Quartet, op. 23 (No. 2?)
  • Wilfred Josephs – Quartet No. 2, op. 17
  • E. Florence Whitlock – Quartet No. 1

1960

  • David Gwilt – Quartet
  • Karel Janovický – Quartet in A, op. 24 (No. 3?)
  • John McCabe – Partita for String Quartet
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet No. 3
  • Geoffrey Winters – Quartet No.2, op. 21

1961

  • Hugo Cole – Quartet in A (Clements Memorial Prize)
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Quartet (un-numbered)
  • David Gow – Quartet No. 2
  • Richard Stoker – Quartet No. 1, op. 11 (fp. Buxton Festival, 1962)
  • Richard Stoker – Miniature Quartet op. 11b
  • E. Florence Whitlock – Quartet No. 2

1962

  • David Blake – Quartet No. 1
  • Isobel Dunlop - Theme and Variations for String Quartet
  • Roberto Gerhard – Quartet No. 2
  • Geraldine Mucha – Quartet No. 2
  • Bernard Stevens – Quartet No. 2, op. 34
  • Richard Stoker – Quartet No. 2, op. 18 (fp. Harlow, 1965)
  • Hugh Wood – Quartet No. 1
  • E. Florence Whitlock – Quartet No. 3

1963

  • Brian Ferneyhough – Quartet No. 1
  • Ian Parrott – Quartet No. 4
  • Edmund Rubbra – Quartet No. 3, op. 112

1964

  • Denis ApIvor – Quartet No. 1
  • Richard Rodney Bennett – Quartet No. 4
  • Philip Cannon – Quartet
  • Kenneth Leighton – Variations for String Quartet, op. 43
  • * George Linstead – Quartet No. 3
  • Ronald Stevenson – Four Meditations for String Quartet
  • William Wordsworth – Quartet No. 6

1965

  • Bernard Barrell – Quartet No. 1, op. 42
  • David Gow: Quartet No. 3
  • Benjamin Frankel – Quartet No. 5 (* see JSTOR)
  • Alan Hoddinott: Quartet No. 1, op. 43
  • Trevor Hold – Quartet No. 1 (rev. 1982)
  • Nicholas Maw – Quartet No. 1
  • Alan Rawsthorne – Quartet for Strings No. 3 (fp. Harlow, July, 1965.
  • Vilém Tauský – Quartet
  • Raymond Warren – Quartet No. 1

1966

  • David Dorward – Quartet No. 3
  • Robert Sherlaw Johnson – Quartet No 1
  • Egon Wellesz: Quartet No. 9, op. 97
  • David Wynne: Quartet No. 3

1967

  • Arnold Cooke – Quartet No. 3
  • Brian Ferneyhough – Sonatas for String Quartet
  • Alexander Goehr – Quartet No. 2
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 8
  • William Mathias – Quartet No. 1 (single movement) op. 38
  • Graham Whettam – Quartet No. 1

1968

  • Edward Cowie – Quartet No. 1, ‘Dungeness Nocturnes’
  • David Harries – Quartet No. 2
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 9
  • George Newson – String Quartet (first broadcast 16/10/68)
  • Cyril Scott – Quartet No. 4
  • Richard Stoker – Quartet No. 3 op. 36 Adlarian (fp. Purcell Room, 1969)

1969

  • Brian Boydell – Quartet No. 3, op. 65
  • Hans Gal – Quartet No. 3 in B minor, op. 95
  • Joseph Horovitz – Quartet No. 5
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – Quartet No. 9
  • Rita McAllister – Quartet
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 7 Cuatro voces ladinas
  • Robert Sherlaw Johnson – Quartet No. 2

1970

  • Lennox Berkeley – Quartet No. 3, op. 76
  • Christopher Brown – Quartet No. 1, op. 24
  • Hans Gal – Quartet No. 4 in Bb major, op. 99
  • Anthony Hedges – Quartet, op. 41
  • David Matthews – Quartet No. 1 (rev. 1980)
  • Patrick Standford – Quartet No. 1: The Unrelenting Spring
  • Hugh Wood – Quartet No. 2

1971

  • Iain Hamilton – Quartet No. 2 (by 1965-71)
  • Wilfred Josephs – Quartet, No. 3, Op. 78

1972

  • Simon Bainbridge – String Quartet (fp. Yale Quartet, South Bank Festival)
  • Isobel Dunlop – Fantasy Quartet
  • Anthony Gilbert – String Quartet N.o 1 (also a version “with Piano Pieces”)
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – String Quartet No. 10
  • David Wynne: String Quartet No. 4
  • Adrian Williams String Quartet No. 1

1973

  • David Blake – String Quartet No. 2
  • Christian Darnton – String Quartet (ms, British Museum)
  • Dominic Muldowney – String Quartet No. 1
  • Geoff Palmer: String Quartet No. 1 (with tenor, last mvt)
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 4
  • Patrick Standford – String Quartet No. 2

1974

  • Edward Cowie: String Quartet No. 1
  • Bernard Rands – Cuaderno for string quartet (is this No. 1?)
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 5

1975

  • William Alwyn – String Quartet No. 2 Spring Waters
  • Malcolm Arnold – String Quartet No. 2 (*)
  • Benjamin Britten: String Quartet No. 3, op. 94
  • Christopher Brown – String Quartet No. 2, op. 43
  • Peter Dickinson – String Quartet No. 2 (with tape and piano)
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 3
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 6
  • Raymond Warren – String Quartet No. 2

1976

  • Denis ApIvor – String Quartet No. 2
  • Arnold Cooke – String Quartet No. 4
  • Alexander Goehr – String Quartet No. 3 *
  • John Hawkins – String Quartet
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No .2
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 2
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – String Quartet No. 11
  • Andrzej Panufnik – String Quartet No. 1 (rev. 1977)
  • Roger Steptoe – String Quartet No. 1

1977

  • Edward Cowie – String Quartet No. 2 ‘Crystal Dances’
  • Andrew Downes – String Quartet No. 1, op. 14
  • John Joubert – String Quartet No. 2, op. 91
  • Jonathan Harvey – String Quartet N.o 1
  • Buxton Orr – String Quartet No. 1 Refrains 4
  • Edmund Rubbra – String Quartet No. 4, op. 150 *
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 7
  • Raymond Warren – String Quartet No. 3

1978

  • Arnold Cooke – String Quartet No. 5 in one movement
  • Edward Cowie: String Quartet No. 2
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 4
  • Minna Keal – String Quartet, op. 1 (fp. 1989)
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 3
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 3
  • Anthony Payne – String Quartet No. 1
  • Michael Tippett – String Quartet No. 4
  • Thomas Wilson – String Quartet No. 4 (Commissioned by the Edinburgh String Quartet) (* recording, YouTube)
  • Hugh Wood – String Quartet No. 3

1979

  • John Gardner – String Quartet No. 2 (25 Preludes)
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – String Quartet No. 12
  • Colin Matthews – String Quartet No. 1
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 8

1980

  • David Ellis – String Quartet No. 1
  • Brian Ferneyhough – String Quartet No. 2
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 5
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Little Quartet (No. 1)
  • Gordon Crosse – String Quartet No. 1, op. 47 (new version, 2010)
  • Dominic Muldowney – String Quartet No. 2
  • Maurice Ohana – String Quartet No. 2
  • Andrzej Panufnik – String Quartet No. 2 Messages
  • David Wynne – String Quartet No. 5
  • Christopher Wright – String Quartet No. 1 (1978-80)

1981

  • David Bedford – Quartet
  • Richard Rodney Bennett – Music for String Quartet
  • Michael Berkeley – Quartet No. 1
  • Michael Berkeley – Quartet No. 2
  • Michael Finnissy: Nobody’s Jig
  • Wilfred Josephs – Quartet No. 4 op. 124 No 2
  • William Mathias – Quartet No. 2, op. 84
  • David Matthews – Quartet No. 4
  • William Sweeney – Quartet
  • Adrian Williams Quartet No. 2

1982

  • David Blake – String Quartet No. 3
  • John Casken – String Quartet No. 1 (1981-2)
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 6
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 4
  • James Macmillan: String Quartet Etwas zurückhaltend
  • Nicholas Maw – String Quartet No. 2
  • Christopher Painter – String Quartet, op. 2
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 9

1983

  • Edward Cowie – String Quartet No. 3 In Flight Music (1982/3, rewritten 2010)
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 1
  • Brian Ferneyhough – Adagissimo for string quartet
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 10

1984

  • William Alwyn – String Quartet No. 3 * (Somme)
  • Edward Cowie – String Quartet No. 4
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 1
  • Michael Finnissy: String Quartet (No. 1)
  • David Gow – String Quartet No. 4
  • Iain Hamilton – String Quartet No. 3
  • Iain Hamilton – String Quartet No. 4
  • Jonathan Harvey – String Quartet No. 2
  • John Hawkins – Caged Moon
  • Alan Hoddinott – String Quartet No.2, op. 113
  • Elizabeth Maconchy – String Quartet No. 13 *
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No 1, op. 1
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 11

1985

  • Julian Anderson – String Quartet No. 1 “Light Music”
  • Gerald Barry – String Quartet No. 1
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 1 “In memoriam David Wynne”
  • David Gow – String Quartet No. 5
  • John McLeod – String Quartet
  • David Matthews – String Quartet N.o 5
  • Buxton Orr – String Quartet No. 2
  • Christopher Painter – String Quartet, op. 15 (No. 2?)
  • Alan Ridout – String Quartet No. 1
  • Roger Steptoe – String Quartet No. 2

1986

  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 2 Two Pieces
  • David Gow – String Quartet No. 6
  • Jonathan Lloyd – String Quartet No. 1 Of Time and Motion
  • William Mathias – String Quartet No. 3, op. 97 * (recording, Media quartet)
  • Paul Patterson – String Quartet No. 1, op. 58

1987

  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 3
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Little Quartet (No. 2)
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 2
  • Andrew Downes – String Quartet No. 2, op. 41
  • Christopher Fox – Heliotropes
  • John Gardner – String Quartet No. 3, op. 176
  • Anthony Gilbert – String Quartet N.o 2 (rev. 2003)
  • Anthony Gilbert – String Quartet No. 3 super hoqueto ‘David’ 7’
  • David Gow: String Quartet No. 7 Quartetto Amabile
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 7
  • John Joubert – String Quartet No. 3, op. 112
  • Benedict Mason – String Quartet No. 1
  • Alan Ridout – String Quartet No. 2
  • Alan Ridout – String Quartet No. 3 * (first mvt fugue)
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 12
  • Howard Skempton – Aria
  • Graham Whettam – String Quartet No. 4

1988

  • Denis ApIvor – String Quartet No. 3
  • Nicola LeFanu – String Quartet No. 1
  • James MacMillan – String Quartet No. 1: Visions of a November Spring(rev. 1991)
  • Geraldine Mucha – String Quartet No. 2

1989 (check these dates, 88 or 89 or both?!)

  • Alan Hoddinott: String Quartet No.3, Op.113
  • Colin Matthews – String Quartet No. 2 (1986-9)
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 5
  • Maurice Ohana – String Quartet No. 3
  • Elis Pehkonen – String Quartet No. 1
  • John Tavener – String Quartet No. 1: “The Hidden Treasure”
  • Ian Venables – String Quartet, op. 32
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 3
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 13
  • Elis Pehkonen – String Quartet No. 1 (check – also a second)

1990

  • James Clapperton – The Great Divorce for string quartet
  • Alexander Goehr – String Quartet No. 4 “In Memoriam John Ogdon” op.52
  • Brian Ferneyhough – String Quartet No. 4 with soprano
  • Berthold Goldschmidt – String Quartet No. 3 (1988-9)
  • David Gow – String Quartet No. 8
  • David Gow – String Quartet No. 9
  • Andrzej Panufnik – String Quartet No 3. Wycinanki
  • Robert Simpson – String Quartet No. 14
  • Ronald Stevenson – String Quartet, Voces Vagabundae
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No. 2, op. 8.
  • Judith Weir – String Quartet

1991

  • Brian Boydell – Adagio and Scherzo for String Quartet, op. 89
  • James Dillon – Quartet No. 2
  • David Matthews – Quartet No. 6
  • John Pickard – Quartet No. 1
  • Robert Simpson – Quartet No. 15
  • John Tavener – Quartet No. 2: “The Last Sleep of the Virgin” (1991) (with handbells)
  • Michael Tippett – Quartet No. 5
  • Adrian Williams – Quartet No. 3

1992

  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 4
  • Graham Fitkin – Servant Quartet (No. 1)
  • Berthold Goldschmidt – Quartet No. 4
  • Trevor Hold – Quartet No. 2 (fp. 21/1/1997)
  • Karel Janovický – Quartet (No. 4?)
  • Alan Ridout – Quartet No. 4 “Malden” *
  • Ian Wilson – Quartet No. 1 “Winter’s Edge”

1993

  • Eleanor Alberga – String Quartet No. 1
  • * Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 4
  • Michael Finnissy: Plain Harmony
  • Graham Fitkin A Small Quartet (No. 2?)
  • David Horne – String Quartet No. 1: “Surrendering to the Stream”
  • Adrian Jack – String Quartet No. 1
  • Daniel Jones – String Quartet No. 8
  • Benedict Mason: String Quartet No. 2
  • John Pickard – String Quartet No. 2
  • * Alan Ridout – String Quartet No. 5 ‘Stocklinch’
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 1

1994

  • Eleanor Alberga – Quartet No. 2
  • Francis Burt – Quartet No. 2 (1993-4)
  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 5
  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 6
  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 7
  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 8
  • Andrew Downes – Quartet No. 3, op. 54
  • Graham Fitkin – Another Small Quartet (No. 3?)
  • James MacMillan – Memento
  • Colin Matthews – String Quartet No. 3
  • David Matthews: String Quartet No. 7 Skies Now are Skies
  • Nicholas Maw – String Quartet No. 3
  • Ian Parrott – String Quartet No. 5
  • John Pickard – String Quartet No. 3
  • Lynne Plowman – String Quartet No. 1 Between Places
  • Bernard Rands – String Quartet No. 2 *
  • Alan Ridout – String Quartet No. 6 ‘Le Vitréen’
  • Leonard Salzedo – String Quartet No. 8
  • Nicholas Simpson – String Quartet in C
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 2 “The Capsizing Man and other stories”

1995

  • (Elliott Carter – String Quartet No. 5)
  • Bernard Barrell – String Quartet No. 2, op. 4132
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 9
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 10
  • Jonathan Harvey – String Quartet No. 3
  • David Horne – String Quartet No. 2: Undulations
  • Adrian Jack – String Quartet No. 2
  • Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 5?)
  • Karl Jenkins – String Quartet No. 2
  • Christopher Painter – String Quartet, op. 30 (No. 3?)
  • Geoff Palmer: String Quartet No. 2 La Maesta
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No 3, op. 18
  • John Tavener – String Quartet No. 3: “Diódia”
  • John Tavener – String Quartet No. 4: “The Bridegroom” (with four female voices) 1999
  • Christopher Wright – String Quartet No. 2
  • John Woolrich: String Quartet No. 1

1996

  • Mervyn Burtch – Quartet No. 11 (fifth movement, “Lights Out” added in 2013). [merv in blog]
  • John Casken – Quartet No. 2
  • David Ellis – Quartet No. 2
  • Adrian Jack – Quartet No. 3
  • Adam Johnson – Quartet No. 1 Innocence to Innocents
  • Peter Reynolds – Quartet No. 1
  • Leonard Salzedo – Quartet No. 9
  • Graham Williams – Quartet No. 2

1997

  • Michael Finnissy: Schnsucht
  • Michael Finnissy: Multiple Forms of Constraint
  • Christopher Gunning: String Quartet No. 1 (rev. 2005)
  • Alan Hoddinott – String Quartet No.4, Op.160
  • Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 6?)
  • Nicola LeFanu – String Quartet No. 2 *
  • John Pickard – String Quartet No. 3
  • Lynne Plowman – String Quartet No. 2
  • Leonard Salzedo – String Quartet No. 10
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 2 Integration
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 3 “Towards the Far Country”

1998

  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 5
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 3
  • Peter Fribbins – String Quartet No. 1 “I Have the Serpent Brought”, 1990–98 rev 2002-4
  • Adrian Jack – String Quartet No. 4
  • James Macmillan String Quartet No. 2 Why is this night different?
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 8
  • John Pickard – String Quartet No. 4
  • John Tavener – String Quartet No. 4: “The Bridegroom” (with four female voices)
  • Ian Venables – String Quartet Op.32 (1997-8)

1999

  • Gerald Barry – String Quartet No. 2
  • Sally Beamish – String Quartet No. 1
  • Sally Beamish – String Quartet No. 2 Opus California
  • Geoffrey Burgon – String Quartet
  • * Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 12
  • Alistair Hinton: String Quartet No. 1
  • Adam Johnson – Quartet No. 2 Surrender Him the Apocalyptic Chrysalis
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No. 4, op. 22

2000

  • Gerald Barry – String Quartet No. 3
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 13 *
  • Sadie Harrison – Taking Flight for string quartet
  • Alan Hoddinott – String Quartet No.5, op. 177
  • Adrian Jack – String Quartet No. 5
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 9
  • Geoff Palmer: String Quartet No. 3 Within, Above, Beyond
  • John Ramsay – String Quartet No. 1 in D minor
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 3
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No.. 4 Veer
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 5 wander, darkling
  • John Woolrich –String Quartet No. 2

21st century

[edit]

2001

  • Eleanor Alberga – String Quartet No. 3
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 6
  • Simon Holt – Two movements for string quartet
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 10
  • Nicholas Maw – Intrada for String Quartet
  • John Ramsay – String Quartet No. 2 in E minor, Shakleton
  • Howard Skempton – Catch *
  • Roger Steptoe – String Quartet No. 3
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 3 Biblical Studies
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 6 In fretta, in vento

2002

  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 7 Cross-Currents
  • David Ellis – String Quartet No. 3, op 70 (fp. 7 April 2004, Manchester)
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 1
  • Anthony Gilbert – String Quartet No. 4
  • Martyn Harry – String Quartet No. 1 (Op.22 1a) Empress
  • David Horne – Subterfuge for 2 violins, viola and cello
  • Adrian Jack – String Quartet No. 6
  • Alec Roth – String Quartet No. 1 Klee Pictures
  • Rachel Stott – Quiet Earth

2003

  • James Clarke – String Quartet No. 1 (fp. Huddersfield)
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 2
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 3
  • Peter Dyson – Stone
  • Jonathan Harvey – String Quartet No. 4 (with live electronics)
  • Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 7?)
  • Bernard Rands – String Quartet No. 3
  • Roger Steptoe – String Quartet No. 4
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 4

2004

  • Simon Bainbridge – Cheltenham Fragments
  • David Blake – String Quartet No. 4
  • Edward Cowie – String Quartet No. 5 “Birdsong Bagatelles”
  • Richard Glover – Temperance with Friction
  • Sadie Harrison: Geda’s Weavings for String Quartet (recorded NMC, premiere 2017)
  • Matthew King – Four Places in Yorkshire
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 4
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 5
  • Graham Fitkin Pawn (No. 4?)
  • David Horne – String Quartet No. 3: “Flight from the Labyrinth”
  • Nigel Osborne – String Quartet No. 1 Medicinal Songs and Dances
  • John Ramsay – String Quartet No. 3 in C major
  • Howard Skempton – Tendrils
  • William Sweeney – String Quartet No. 3
  • Ian Wilson – Lyric Suite, 7 Elegiac Pieces for string quartet (No. 7)

2005

  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 6
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 7
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 8
  • Kenneth Dempster – String Quartet No. 4 “The Cold Dancer”
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 4
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 8 (recorded)
  • Michael Doherty – String Quartet No. 2
  • Duncan Druce – Close to the giant’s foot
  • Nicholas Maw – String Quartet No. 4
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 4
  • Christopher Wright – String Quartet No. 3

2006

  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 9
  • Stephen Dodgson – String Quartet No. 9 (recorded)
  • Brian Ferneyhough – String Quartet No. 5
  • Michael Finnissy: String Quartet No. 2 (2006-7)
  • Graham Fitkin “Inside” (No. 5?)
  • Christopher Fox – 1-2-3
  • Peter Fribbins – String Quartet No. 2 After Cromer
  • Richard Glover – Tracabio
  • David Gorton – Strin Quartet No. 1 Trajectories
  • David Horne – String Quartet No. 4
  • Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 8?)
  • Patrick Jonathan – String Quartet

2007

  • Gerald Barry – String Quartet No. 4 First Sorrow
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Naxos Quartets No. 10
  • Graham Fitkin String (No. 6?)
  • Adam Johnson – Quartet No. 3
  • James MacMillan – String Quartet No. 3
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No. 5, op 35 *
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 5
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 8 unbroken white line

2008

  • Ronald Corp: String Quartet No. 1 The Bustard
  • Edward Cowie: String Quartet No. 5 Birdsong Bagatelles
  • Robert Crawford – String Quartet No. 3
  • Richard Glover – Inversions in Retrograde
  • David Gorton – String Quartet No. 2 Frozen Landscapes
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 11
  • Robin Stevens: String Quartet No. 1 in one movement (rec. Divine Art)
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No. 6, op 36
  • Mark-Anthony Turnage – Twisted Blues with Twisted Ballad

2009

  • James Clarke – Quartet No. 2 (fp. Huddersfield Festival)
  • James Dillon – Quartet No. 5 *
  • * Michael Finnissy: String Quartet No. 3 (2007-9)
  • Anthony Gilbert – Quartet No. 5
  • John Hawkins – Seven into Eight
  • Adam Johnson – Quartet No. 4, Four Artists
  • Nigel Osborne – Tiree for string quartet
  • Geoff Palmer: Quartet No. 4 After Haydn
  • John Ramsay – Quartet No. 4, Charles Darwin
  • John de Simone – Intimacy for String Quartet
  • Matthew Taylor – Quartet No. 7, op 37
  • Peter Thompson – Quartet No. 5
  • Ian Wilson – Quartet No. 9 heaven lay close
  • Ian Wilson – Quartet No. 10 Across a clear blue sky

2010

  • Breffni O’Byrne – First String Quartet
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 14
  • Ronald Corp: String Quartet No. 2
  • * Robert Crawford – String Quartet No. 4
  • Gordon Crosse – String Quartet No. 2
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 6
  • Brian Ferneyhough– String Quartet No. 6
  • Thomas Hyde – String Quartet (2009-10)
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 12, op. 114 (2004-10)
  • Naomi Pinnock – String Quartet (No. 1)
  • Alec Roth – String Quartet No. 2
  • * * Anthony Payne – Quartet No. 2
  • * Adrian Williams Quartet No. 4
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 11 “im Schatten”
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 12 “Her charms invited”

2011

  • Sebastian Adams – String Quartet No.1
  • * Sally Beamish – String Quartet No. 3 “Reed Stanzas”
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 15
  • Ronald Corp: String Quartet No. 3
  • * Gordon Crosse – String Quartet No. 3 “A View from Pendle”
  • Donnacha Dennehy – One Hundred Goodbyes (string quartet and soundtrack)
  • Richard Glover – Seventh Inversions
  • Nicola LeFanu – String Quartet No. 3 (Kreutzer Quartet premiere, March 2011)
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 6 Silver Nocturnes
  • Paul Patterson – String Quartet No. 2, op 110, Dances for Thaxted
  • Emma-Ruth Richards – String Quartet
  • Robin Stevens: String Quartet No. 2 Three Portraits (rec. Divine Art)
  • * Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 13 Still life in green and red (with soundtrack)

2012

  • Simon Bainbridge – String Quartet No. 2 “Mehretu”
  • * Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 16
  • Brian Elias – String Quartet (premiered by the Jerusalem Quartet)
  • * Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 9?)
  • Christoper Fox – chambre privée
  • John Hawkins – Fuzon *
  • Colin Matthews – String Quartet No. 4 (British Composer Awards, 2013)
  • John McCabe – String Quartet No. 7 Summer Eves *
  • John Pickard – String Quartet No. 5 *
  • Naomi Pinnock – String Quartet No. 2
  • Peter Reynolds – String Quartet No. 2 “Footsteps Quiet in the Shadows”
  • Kevin Raftery – String Quartet No. 1 (recorded, Chandos)
  • Rhian Samuel: Threaded Light – String Quartet with optional percussion (fp. Cardiff, 29 May 2012)
  • * Rebecca Saunders – Fletch *
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 6
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 7
  • Christopher Wright – String Quartet No. 4 “Beacon Fell”
  • Marc Yeats – the need fire
  • Marc Yeats – from manuscripts of moving song

2013

  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 17
  • Mervyn Burtch – String Quartet No. 11, new fifth movement, “Lights Out”
  • Edward Cowie – String Quartet No. 6 “The Four Winds” (wp 19 July 2018, Kreutzer Quartet)
  • Gordon Crosse – String Quartet No. 4 “Blythe Postcards”
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 7
  • Christopher Fox – The Wedding at Cana
  • Simon Holt – 3rd Quartet
  • Karel Janovický – String Quartet (No. 10?)
  • Geoff Palmer: String Quartet No. 5 Haec Dies
  • Alec Roth – String Quartet No. 3 “Autumnal”)
  • Alec Roth – String Quartet No. 4 (“On Malvern Hills”)
  • * Mark-Anthony Turnage – Contusion
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 14 “Tribe”

2014

  • James Clarke – String Quartet No. 3
  • Edward Gregson – String Quartet No. 1
  • Helen Grime – String Quartet (fp. Queens Hall Edinburgh 21/5/14)
  • Martyn Harris – String Quartet No. 2 Boa Forma
  • Alasdair Nicolson – String Quartet No. 2 (“The Keeper of Sheep”)
  • Joseph Phibbs: String Quartet No. 1
  • Nicholas Simpson – String Quartet in G minor
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 6
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 15 “Alluvio”
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 16 “Aus der Zauberküche”

2015

  • Julian Anderson – String Quartet No. 2 (British Composer Awards)
  • Gordon Crosse – String Quartet No. 5
  • Colin Matthews – String Quartet No. 5
  • David Matthews – String Quartet No. 13 (2014-15, wp, 19 July 2018, Kreutzer Quartet)
  • Alasdair Nicolson – String Quartet No. 3, Slanting Rain
  • Joseph Phibbs – String Quartet No. 2 *
  • Graham Williams – String Quartet No. 8
  • Marc Yeats – Observation 1
  • Marc Yeats – Observation 2

2016

  • Donnacha Dennehy – The Weather of It *
  • David Matthews: String Quartet No. 14
  • Howard Skempton – Moving On
  • Mark Antony Turnage – Shroud (fp. 27 Sept 2016, Ohio, Emerson String Quartet
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 17 Linte
  • Marc Yeats – Observation 3
  • Marc Yeats – Observation 4
  • Marc Yeats – Observation 5

2017

  • James Clarke – String Quartet No. 4
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 8
  • Nicola LeFanu – String Quartet No. 4 (fp. 2 September 2017, York)
  • Geoff Palmer: String Quartet No. 6 For Max
  • Kevin Raftery – String Quartet No. 2
  • Matthew Taylor – String Quartet No. 8, op 56
  • Freya Waley-Cohen – String Quartet “Snap Dragon”

2018

  • Julian Anderson – String Quartet No.3 Hana no hanataba
  • Anna Appleby – String Quartet No. 1
  • James Dillon – String Quartet No. 9 (fp. Huddersfield, November 2018)*
  • * Edmund Finnis: String Quartet No. 1 “Aloysius”
  • Robin Haigh – Samoyeds for string quartet
  • Simon Holt – 4th Quartet “Cloud House”
  • Anthony Payne: String Quartet No. 3
  • Joseph Phibbs – String Quartet No. 3 (rev. 2021)
  • Rebecca Saunders – Unbreathed for string quartet
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 18 – Up Above the World
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 19 – Rossiniana
  • John Woolrich – String Quartet Badinerie (from “A Book of Inventions”) (fp. MOMA New York, July 2018).
    • (2018) – (“A Book of Inventions” is a set of quartets: Badinerie, Villanesca, Débricollage, Scamander and Another Journey Calls, so far. (2018)

2019

  • Sally Beamish – String Quartet No. 4 Nine Fragments (fp. 22 Feb 2019, Wigmore Hall)
  • Peter Thompson – String Quartet No. 7
  • Mark Anthony Turnage – Winter’s Edge for string quartet (fp. 20 March 2019).
  • Ian Wilson – String Quartet No. 20 Capital

2024

  • Joseph Phibbs – String Quartet No. 4


  • (2018) – (“A Book of Inventions” is a set of quartets: Badinerie, Villanesca, Débricollage, Scamander and Another Journey Calls, so far.

Undated so far

  • ???? Richard Walthew: String Quartet No. 1 in Bb Major (No. 2?)
  • ???? Alice Mary Meadows White formerly Alice Mary Smith, three string quartets.
  • * ???? Rosalind Ellicott – String Quartet
  • Robin Field - eight string quartets
  • ???? Walford Davies – two string quartets (in D and C minor) (1890s)
  • ???? Harry Farjeon- * String Quartet No.1 In G
  • String Quartet No.2 in B flat
  • String Quartet No.3
  • String Quartet No.4 in C major Op.65 1927 pub. by W Paxton & Co. (added)

????

  • Hugo Vernon Anson – string quartet?
  • Dorothy Gow – String Quartet No. 1 in One Movement
  • Dorothy Gow – Fantasy String Quartet
  • Maurice Jacobson -String Quartet in G (no date – Grove)
  • Mary Anderson Lucas (1882-1952 – six string quartets
  • Fiona McCleary (1900-?), String Quartet
  • M.E. Marshall – two string Quartets (one of them based on the song of a wood pigeon)
  • Judith Morrison – string quartet (ded. Christian Darnton) (ms. British Museum).
  • Elis Pehkonen – String Quartet No. 2?
  • Humphrey Proctor-Gregg – String Quartet in G minor (first three movements only extant); String Quartet No.1 in F sharp minor**; String Quartet No.2 in D minor
  • Ralph Walter Wood (R W Wood) – String Quartet Nos 1?

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Squire, William Barclay (1885). "Calkin, James" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 4. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 322.
  2. ^ Ellerton wrote 50 or so quartets between the 1840s and 1869s, 20 of them were published
  3. ^ a b 'Leigh: Complete Chamber Works', Dutton Epoch CDLX7143 (2004)
  4. ^ Dwight, John Sullivan (1853). Dwight's Journal of Music at Google Books, July 10, 1852 issue. p. 111.
  5. ^ a b Mike Purton Recordings MPR114 (2023), reviewed at MusicWeb International
  6. ^ The Times, 29 October 1938, p. 10


Stanford Preludes, op. 163

[edit]
  • 1: C Major (chorale-like opening prelude -JDJ) (Texturally the opening C Major number has that clear, triadic, Bach-like character: a straightforward opening piece built of a texture of strong, pillar-like gestures. But by its layout and form we clearly see Stanford's lush, almost oozy harmony (lots of unexpected bVIs, unprepared modulations to far-off F#, and plenty of Gr +6s). The uniform blocks of sound become almost like bars keeping the Wagnerian superfluity at bay - MJR) (apeing an organ texture JDSH)
  • 2: C Minor ("affecting" threnody, plaintive tone contrasting with No 1 -JDJ)
  • 3: Db Major (a study, passion contrasts with No 2 -JDJ)
  • 4: C# Minor (epigrammatic quality common to so many preludes -JDJ) (one of my favorites, also has that capricious character, wreaking Puckish havoc on a 6/8 time signature, although with marked restraint. It reminds me of Mendelssohn's Songs without Words, and I am reminded that Mendelssohn held a special place in the hearts of Britain for quite a while - MJR)
  • 5: D Major (a study -JDJ)
  • 6: D Minor (has the gentle poise of a Schumannesque Intermezzo JDJ) (barely keeps itself together, hardly unified by a devious false recapitulation (in E-flat... that slips into D-flat before being mastered back into d by sheer willpower!). It could very well end anywhere and the final cadence feels a little forced, like a social formality. The last three measures of this piece do recall an important figure from Prelude 1 in C Major and could point to some sort of intermotivic relationship at work throughout the piece - MJR)
  • 7: Eb Major (followed by triumphal strains remniscent of the Davidsbundler - JDJ)
  • 8: Eb Minor "Study"
  • 9: E Major "Humoresque" (idiosyncratic - JDJ)
  • 10: E Minor ("melancholy waltz" -JDJ) (Chopin's Mazurkas inform an appreciation of the Tempo di Valse Prelude 10 in E minor. Capricious changes of rhythm and metric emphasis, dramatic but simple melodies, and tempo fluctuations all recall the older tradition. This piece is ultimately playful, reminiscent of a salon or even a nursery tradition MJR)
  • 11: F Major (graceful Romance JDJ)
  • 12: F Minor (tragic disposition JDJ)
  • 13: F# Major (pastoral "In the Woodland", a Griegian lyric piece, contrast with No 12 JDJ)
  • 14: F# Minor (epigrammatic quality common to so many preludes JDJ)
  • 15: G Major (surely a Moment Musical JDJ) (cheeky Allegretto, bounces over a whole range of unexpected keys - MRMW)
  • 16: G Minor ("Fantasy" JDJ)
  • 17: Ab Major ("eccentric Lander" JDJ)
  • 18: G# Minor "Toccata" (a study JDJ)
  • 19: A Major (Irish song complete with 'harp' accompaniment JDJ) (embroiders a slow and arrestingly simple hymn texture with florid arpeggios in a way that again recalls Mendelssohn (perhaps Song without Words Op. 38 No. 4, also in A - MJR)
  • 20: A Minor (epigrammatic quality common to so many preludes JDJ)
  • 21: Bb Major "Carillons" (exuberant peels of bells JDJ)
  • 22: Bb Minor "In Memoriam M.G." (Solemn Funeral March, in memory of Maurice Gray, son of Alan Gray, contrast with previous JDJ)
  • 23: B Major "En Rondeau" (quirky March - JDJ)
  • 24: B Minor (a study - JDJ) (I see and hear an inversion of the upward figuration of Mendelssohn's Prelude 1 in E minor Op. 35 (1837) in this stormy closing number - MJR)

Stanford Preludes, op. 179

[edit]
  • 25: C Major (ostinato, same descending fourth pattern as No 38, though less strict - JDJ)
  • 26: C Minor
  • 27: Db Major
  • 28: C# Minor (interesting unifying device - constructed out of fluctuating metrical patterns, such as 3-4-2 or 2-3 - see also No 47 - JDJ)
  • 29: D Major (a Caprice - JDJ)
  • 30: D Minor (a shadow-show piece very much in the same vein as Parry's Bogies and Sprites from the Shulbrede Tunes - JDJ)
  • 31: Eb Major (influence of organ with walking pedal part - JDJ)
  • 32: Eb Minor (a delicate song without words - JDJ)
  • 33: E Major (March - JDJ)
  • 34: E Minor (Schubertian waltz - JDJ)
  • 35: F Major (influence of organ, all built on tonic pedal and accompanying improvisations- JDJ)
  • 36: F Minor
  • 37: Gb Major, fughetta (one of a number with baroque orientation, fits Harold Samuel dedication)
  • 38: F Sharp Minor (Basso Ostinato) (ostinato, same descending fourth pattern as No 25, though more strict - JDJ)
  • 39: G Major (a Schumannesque Fantasiestuck - JDJ)
  • 40: G Minor (Quasi Recitativo) (operatic - JDJ)
  • 41: Ab Major, gavotte (baroque orientation, typical keyboard suite dance - JDJ)
  • 42: G# Minor, musette (followed by reprise of 41?) (baroque, orientation, typical keyboard suite dance - JDJ)
  • 43: A Major, sarabande (baroque orientation, typical keyboard suite dance - JDJ)
  • 44: A Minor (study in octaves, recalls Chopin's Sonata No 2 - JDJ)
  • 45: Bb Major (suggestive of a gigue, baroque orientation, typical keyboard suite dance - JDJ)
  • 46: Bb Minor, Alla marcia funebre (March, reminiscent of funeral march at the end of Stanford's incidental music to Beckett)
  • 47: B Major (interesting unifying device - constructed out of fluctuating metrical patterns, such as 3-4-2 or 2-3 - see also No 28 - JDJ)
  • 48: B Minor (Addio) (this set last major contribution to keyboard repertoire, valedictory poignance of special autobiographical significance - JDJ)

general comments

[edit]
  • "study" = particular insistence on selected technical features.
  • juxtaposition of mood and tempo - character of each piece is distinct from its neighbours.
  • clashes between a Mendelssohn-like conservatism and a complex harmonic language that do not always make for a rounded composition - MJR
  • set 2 - baroque influences stronger towards the end (JD)
  • seek to explore a single idea or device

SOURCES: JDJ - sleeve notes by Jeremy Dibble to Peter Jacobs 2 CDs MJR - Preludophilia: Stanford's 24 Preludes Op. 163 - Matthew J Roy MRMW - Mark Rochester MusicWeb Review JDSH - sleeve notes by Jeremy Dibble to Sam Heyward CDs (38 of the preludes)


Joseph Jongen

[edit]
  • Sonata Eroica, one of Jongen's best known organ works. composed in 1930 for the inauguration of the organ at the Palais des Beaux Arts in Brussels. (MW)
  • Symphonie Concertante op. 81 composed in 1926. Organ and large orchestra, four movements.
  • Concert à cinq Op.71 of 1923 for flute, harp and string trio. Three movements. The very first work written for the French ensemble Quintette instrumental Pierre Jamet
  • Rhapsody Op.70 (piano and wind quintet) was written in 1922. Multi-section, single movement structure.

Sonate-duo Op.109, completed in 1938, a theme and variations, full of brilliant string writing and often intricately contrapuntal.

  • Deux pièces en trio Op.95 of 1931 is for piano trio and has already been recorded repeatedly over the last few years.
  • Suite pour orchestre et alto principal Op.48 recorded many years ago during the LP era but shamefully neglected since then
  • Danse lente Op.56 for flute and harp composed in 1917 in England - one of his most popular works.
  • Jongen’s Violin Concerto, one of the composer’s first substantial works. It was described by his contemporary Florent Schmitt as ‘one of the finest violin concertos’;

13 Preludes, Op. 69 (1922) 24 Petits Préludes dans tous les tons, Op. 116 (1940-41)

Cello Concerto Op. 18 (1900) [33:47] Poème No. 1, Op. 16 for cello and orchestra (1899) [8:16] Poème No. 2, Op. 46 for cello and orchestra (1916) [13:37]

Tableaux pittoresques Op.56 (1917)

Triptyque pour orchestre Op.103 (1937)

KPM 1000 Series

[edit]

Between 1966 and 1970 the most frequently used composers for the series included Syd Dale, Johnny Pearson, Keith Mansfield, Alan Hawkshaw, James Clarke (born 1941) and David Lindup.

  • KPM 1001 - The Mood Modern (1966).
    • Johnny Hawksworth (9), Hannelore Wright (4), Geoff Alderson (1), Derrick Mason (1), John Waring - aka Derrick Mason (1).
  • KPM 1002 - The Sounds of Syd Dale
    • 15 new Dale compositions, including 'The Hell Raisers', used as the theme for Associated Rediffusion's Orlando TV series, and 'Walk and Talk', used as the introductory music for BBC TV's Transmitter Information Service.
  • KPM 1003 - The Backgrounds - The Backgrounds were a group of French musicians. This disc includes nine jazz group arrangements of Bach preludes and fugues
  • KPM 1004 - Coloured Strings. A reissue of Heinz Kiessling's 1964 album of the same name
  • KPM 1005 - Sacred Music. Merrick Farran
  • KPM 1006 - Light Intimations 1
  • KPM 1007 - Light Intimations 2
  • KPM 1008 - A Distinctive Approach
  • KPM 1009 - Accent On Percussion
  • KPM 1010 - Happy Families
  • KPM 1011 - Original Application Of The Augemented String Quartet
  • KPM 1012 - Lightweight Backgrounds
  • KPM 1013 - Harp Solos
  • KPM 1014 - All That Jazz
  • KPM 1015 - The Sound Of "Pop"
  • KPM 1016 - Pleasure Spectacle
  • KPM 1017 - Impact and Action - Syd Dale
  • KPM 1018 - Tension and Suspense
  • KPM 1019 - Comedy
  • KPM 1020 - Twentieth Century Portrait
  • KPM 1021 - A Light Jazz Feeling
  • KPM 1022 -Suite For Horn, Woodwind & Strings
  • KPM 1023 - Music Of The Nations Volume 1 - Hungary
  • KPM 1024 - Serial Structures
  • KPM 1025 - It's About Time
  • KPM 1026 - Orchestral Kaleidoscope
  • KPM 1027 - Soul Organ Showcase
  • KPM 1028 - Miniature Moods
  • KPM 1029 - Colours In Rhythm
  • KPM 1030 - Bar Piano
  • KPM 1031 - Music Of The Nations Vol 2 - Arabic/Asian/Oriental
  • KPM 1032 - Jazz Orchestral
  • KPM 1033 - Masqerade
  • KPM 1034 - Music Of The Nations Vol 3 - Germany/Austria
  • KPM 1035 - Underscore
  • KPM 1036 - Gentle Sounds
  • KPM 1037 - Flamboyant Themes
  • KPM 1038 - Flamboyant Themes - Vol 2, Syd Dale
  • KPM 1039 - Light Intimations Vol 3
  • KPM 1040 - Theme Suites Vol 2/ Viewpoint In Orchestral Dynamics
  • KPM 1041 - Flamboyant Themes Volume 3
  • KPM 1042 - Jazz Graphics/ The Spy Set
  • KPM 1043 - Beat Incidental
  • KPM 1044 - The Big Beat
  • KPM 1045 - Children And Animation
  • KPM 1046 - Sounds In Percussion
  • KPM 1047 - Single Instruments Vol 1 - Percussion
  • KPM 1048 - Two Harpsichord Suites/ Two Elizabethan Suites
  • KPM 1049 - Chorus And Orchestra
  • KPM 1050 - Nature Study
  • KPM 1051 - Light Intimation Vol 4
  • KPM 1052 - Christmas Party
  • KPM 1053 - Native Africa
  • KPM 1054 - Native Africa Vol. 2
  • KPM 1055 - Dramatic Background
  • KPM 1056 - Underscore Vol 2
  • KPM 1057 - Scenesetters, Fanfares & Punctuations/ Utility Drama Segments
  • KPM 1058 - Gentle Sounds - Volume 2
  • KPM 1059 - Gentle Sounds - Volume 3
  • KPM 1060 - Open Air
  • KPM 1061 - Impact And Action - Volume 2
  • KPM 1062 - On The Lighter Side
  • KPM 1063 - Contemporary Colour
  • KPM 1064 - Happy Novelties
  • KPM 1065 - Flamboyant Themes - Volume 4
  • KPM 1066 - Progress And Prestige
  • KPM 1067 - The Big Beat - Volume 2
  • KPM 1068 - The Heritage Of Man/ Textures For String Quintet, Kybd & Perc
  • KPM 1069 - The Contemporary Orchestra/ Interfusions
  • KPM 1070 - Bugaloo In Brazil. Reissue of Les Baxter's 1969 album African Blue
  • KPM 1071 - The Brazilian Suite
  • KPM 1072 - The Guitar Family
  • KPM 1073 - Contemporary Guitar
  • KPM 1074 - Marches For Any Occasion
  • KPM 1075 - The All Stars Brass Band
  • KPM 1076 - Speed And Excitement
  • KPM 1077 - Progressive Pop
  • KPM 1078 - Sweet Groove
  • KPM 1079 - Beat Industrial
  • KPM 1080 - Flute For Moderns
  • KPM 1081 - Cartoon Capers. Merrick Farran
  • KPM 1082 - The Brass Family
  • KPM 1083 - Piano Cocktail
  • KPM 1084 - Mediterranean Intrigue/Martenot. Includes parts of Neil Ardley's Greek Variations
  • KPM 1085 - Electronic Music. Merrick Farran
  • KPM 1086 - Music For A Young Generation
  • KPM 1087 - Technical Standpoint/ Spice Of Life
  • KPM 1088 - Bass Guitar And Percussion - Volume 1
  • KPM 1089 - Bass Guitar And Percussion - Volume 2
  • KPM 1090 - Bass And Percussion - Volume 3
  • KPM 1091 - Vibraphone Jazz Quartet
  • KPM 1092 - Today's Achievements
  • KPM 1093 - The World Of Johnny Scott
  • KPM 1094 - Accent On Percussion/ Construction In Jazz
  • KPM 1095 - Theme Suites- Mustang
  • KPM 1096 - Music Pictorial
  • KPM 1097 - Jazzrock
  • KPM 1098 - Progress And Prestige Vol 2 / Fight For Survival
  • KPM 1099 - Open Air Vol 2
  • KPM 1100 - The Big Screen
  • KPM 1101 - A Moog For All Reason
  • KPM 1102 - Electrosound
  • KPM 1103 - Electromusic
  • KPM 1104 - Electrosonic
  • KPM 1105 - Medieval Music
  • KPM 1106 - Woodwind And Harpsichord
  • KPM 1107 - Harpsichord Old And New
  • KPM 1108 - The Solo Harp
  • KPM 1109 - The Magic Of Bouchety
  • KPM 1110 - Life Is For Living
  • KPM 1111 - Brass Plus Moog
  • KPM 1112 - The Rhythm Of Modern Life/ Vaudeville
  • KPM 1113 - Percussion Workshop
  • KPM 1114 - History Of War And Peace
  • KPM 1115 - Bandstand
  • KPM 1116 - Victoriana
  • KPM 1117 - The Western Hemisphere - Vol 1 / Country Music - U.S.A.
  • KPM 1118 - The Human Touch
  • KPM 1119 - Look On The Bright Side
  • KPM 1120 - Daybreak
  • KPM 1121 - Fusion
  • KPM 1122 - Move With The Times
  • KPM 1123 - Friendly Faces
  • KPM 1124 - Big Business / Wind Of Change
  • KPM 1125 - Voices In Harmony
  • KPM 1126 - Summer Songbirds
  • KPM 1127 - Happy Rainbows
  • KPM 1128 - Counterpoint In Rhythm
  • KPM 1129 - The Contemporary Harp/ Light And Leisure
  • KPM 1130 - Afro Rock
  • KPM 1131 - The Trendsetters
  • KPM 1132 - Synthesis
  • KPM 1133 - Animation Playtime
  • KPM 1134 - Childhood
  • KPM 1135 - Discotheoue
  • KPM 1136 - Industrial Panorama
  • KPM 1137 - Great Expectations
  • KPM 1138 - Gathering Crowds
  • KPM 1139 - Happy Hearts
  • KPM 1140 - Soft Horizons
  • KPM 1141 - Image
  • KPM 1142 - Woodwind
  • KPM 1143 - Suspended Woodwind
  • KPM 1144 - Harmonica
  • KPM 1145 - Jingles
  • KPM 1146 - Links, Bridges And Stings
  • KPM 1147 - Silent Movies (Volume 1)
  • KPM 1148 - Silent Movies (Volume 2)
  • KPM 1149 - Ragtime Piano / Cinema Organ
  • KPM 1150 - Jazz Of The Twenties
  • KPM 1151 - Come Dancing
  • KPM 1152 - Sound Odyssey
  • KPM 1153 - The Electronic Light Orchestra
  • KPM 1154 - Electrosound (Volume 2)
  • KPM 1155 - A Moog For More Reasons
  • KPM 1156 - Metropolis
  • KPM 1157 - The Hunter (Drama Suite)/ Adventure Story
  • KPM 1158 - Flamboyant Themes (Volume 5)
  • KPM 1159 - The Pleasures Of Life
  • KPM 1160 - Friends And Lovers
  • KPM 1161 - Industry Volume 1
  • KPM 1162 - Industry Volume 2
  • KPM 1163 - Rock Spectrum
  • KPM 1164 - Loony Tunes
  • KPM 1165 - A Jazz Inclination
  • KPM 1166 - Piano Viberations
  • KPM 1167 - Outdoor Life
  • KPM 1168 - Drama
  • KPM 1169 - Arp Odyssey
  • KPM 1170 - Sounds Of The Times
  • KPM 1171 - Impact
  • KPM 1172 - Visual Impact
  • KPM 1173 - Solid Gold
  • KPM 1174 - Amusement
  • KPM 1175 - Love's Themes
  • KPM 1176 - Chartbusters
  • KPM 1177 - Hot Wax
  • KPM 1178 - Caricature
  • KPM 1179 - Orchestral Contrasts
  • KPM 1180 - Tender Emotions
  • KPM 1181 - Silver Band
  • KPM 1182 - Traditional Folk Music Of Great Britain And France
  • KPM 1183 - Middle East Suite
  • KPM 1184 - Gemini Suite-Russian Suite
  • KPM 1185 - The String Family
  • KPM 1186 - The Classical Guitar European Suite
  • KPM 1187 - The Nature of Woodwind
  • KPM 1188 - Contempo
  • KPM 1189 - Distinctive Themes/ Race to Achievement
  • KPM 1190 - Vivid Underscores
  • KPM 1191 - Landscapes - Things To Come
  • KPM 1192 - The Road Forward
  • KPM 1193 - Classical Synthesiser/ Stained Glass Windows
  • KPM 1194 - Big City Suite/ Jingle Jangle Jingles
  • KPM 1195 - Music Suites Volume 1
  • KPM 1196 - Rock On
  • KPM 1197 - Industry Vol.3
  • KPM 1198 - The Lighter Side/ Life Of Leisure
  • KPM 1199 - The Classical Harp
  • KPM 1200 - Olympiad 2000
  • KPM 1201 - Atmospheres
  • KPM 1202 - Music Of The Nations Vol 4 - France/ Italy
  • KPM 1203 - The Guitar Of John Renbourn
  • KPM 1204 - Music Of The 30's/ Music Of The 40's
  • KPM 1205 - Contemporary Themes
  • KPM 1206 - Cause For Concern
  • KPM 1207 - Light And Easy
  • KPM 1208 - The Good Life
  • KPM 1209 - Contemporary Impact
  • KPM 1210 - Pictures In The Mind
  • KPM 1211 - Miniature Theme Suites
  • KPM 1212 - A Child For All Ages
  • KPM 1213 - The Spirit Of Christmas
  • KPM 1214 - Pulse Of The City
  • KPM 1215 - Flutes Of Fancy
  • KPM 1216 - Wessex Tales And Elements
  • KPM 1217 - The World About Us
  • KPM 1218 - Country And Western And Bluegrass
  • KPM 1219 - Marchtime USA/ Hollywood Heyday
  • KPM 1220 - Olympiad 2001
  • KPM 1221 - National Heritage / Rural Heritage
  • KPM 1222 - Conflict And Consequence
  • KPM 1223 - Small Is Beautiful
  • KPM 1224 - Classical Concussion
  • KPM 1225 - Industry And Awards
  • KPM 1226 - A Fear Of The Dark
  • KPM 1227 - Pipes Flutes And Whistles
  • KPM 1228 - Ideas In Action - Volume 1
  • KPM 1229 - Ideas In Action - Volume 2
  • KPM 1230 - Disco Fever
  • KPM 1231 - Communications
  • KPM 1232 - Variations
  • KPM 1233 - Predictions Part 1
  • KPM 1234 - Predictions Part 2
  • KPM 1235 - The Age Of Discovery
  • KPM 1236 - Love Of Life
  • KPM 1237 - Guitar Masterclass
  • KPM 1238 - The Piano Album
  • KPM 1239 - Jingles And Programme Cues - Volume 1
  • KPM 1240 - Action World
  • KPM 1241 - Technology And Movement
  • KPM 1242 - Planet Earth
  • KPM 1243 - The Vorhaus Sound Experiments
  • KPM 1244 - Handplayed By Robots
  • KPM 1245 - Archive Series Volume 1 - Light Atmospheres
  • KPM 1246 - Archive Series Volume 2 - Drama
  • KPM 1247 - Variations For String Orchestra
  • KPM 1248 - Synthesis 2
  • KPM 1249 - Classical Odyssey
  • KPM 1250 - Jingles And Programme Cues Volume 2
  • KPM 1251 - Richard Harvey's Nifty Digits
  • KPM 1252 - England Town And Country
  • KPM 1253 - The Reggae Album
  • KPM 1254 - International Business
  • KPM 1255 - Lifestyles
  • KPM 1256 - Jingles & Programme Cues Volume 3
  • KPM 1257 - Country Sketches And Antiquities
  • KPM 1258 - Music Of The Nations Vol 5 - Australia
  • KPM 1259 - Now And Then
  • KPM 1260 - Lifeforce
  • KPM 1261 - Technomatics
  • KPM 1262 - Perception
  • KPM 1263 - Winners
  • KPM 1264 - International Buisness 2
  • KPM 1265 - Clouds
  • KPM 1266 - Image Makers
  • KPM 1267 - Sunburst
  • KPM 1268 - Futures
  • KPM 1269 - Fun Time
  • KPM 1270 - Nursery Rhymes
  • KPM 1271 - Folk Songs
  • KPM 1272 - Hymns, Carols, Mechanical Instruments
  • KPM 1273 - The Red White and Blue
  • KPM 1274 - Music For the Movies
  • KPM 1275 - Love Stories
  • KPM 1276 - Blues and Ragtime Guitar
  • KPM 1277 - Future Perspective
  • KPM 1278 - Historical Perspective
  • KPM 1279 - Sleight of Mind
  • KPM 1280 - Pot Pourri
  • KPM 1281 - The Middle of the Road
  • KPM 1282 - Unnatural Causes
  • KPM 1283 - Blue Perspectives
  • KPM 1284 - The Four Elements
  • KPM 1285 - Duty Free
  • KPM 1286 - Traditional Folk Music of the British Isles Volume 1
  • KPM 1287 - Traditional Folk Music of the British Isles Volume 2
  • KPM 1288 - Foundations
  • KPM 1289 - Foundations
  • KPM 1290 - Seeds in the Wind
  • KPM 1291 - The Best of Christmas
  • KPM 1292 - Soundwaves
  • KPM 1293 - Traditions
  • KPM 1294 - Surprise Package
  • KPM 1295 - Bass Patterns
  • KPM 1296 - The Next One
  • KPM 1297 - Archive Series Volume 3 - Light Hearts
  • KPM 1298 - Archive Series Volume 4- Newsreels
  • KPM 1299 - Classical Fusion
  • KPM 1300 - Up Front
  • KPM 1301 - The Jingle Machine
  • KPM 1302 - Entertainment
  • KPM 1303 - Sound Conjurer
  • KPM 1304 - Contact
  • KPM 1305 - Impressions
  • KPM 1306 - Rock Licks From the Snakeranch
  • KPM 1307 - Focus
  • KPM 1308 - A Higher State
  • KPM 1309 - Another Surprise
  • KPM 1310 - A Trick of the Light
  • KPM 1311 - Project
  • KPM 1312 - Storytellers
  • KPM 1313 - Face to Face
  • KPM 1314 - Open Your Mind
  • KPM 1315 - Options 1
  • KPM 1316 - Options 2
  • KPM 1317 - The Editor's Companion - Volume 1
  • KPM 1318 - The Editor's Companion - Volume 2
  • KPM 1319 - Fantasia
  • KPM 1320 - Archive Series Volume 5 - Comedy/ Happy Activity
  • KPM 1321 - The Video Connection
  • KPM 1322 - Jingle and Programme Cues - Volume 4
  • KPM 1323 - Jingle and Programme Cues - Volume 5
  • KPM 1324 - Black and White
  • KPM 1325 - Good News
  • KPM 1326 - Jingle and Programme Cues - Volume 6
  • KPM 1327 - Pictures From a Life
  • KPM 1328 - The Editor's Companion - Volume 3
  • KPM 1329 - The Editor's Companion - Volume 4
  • KPM 1330 - In at the Deep End
  • KPM 1331 - Pictures
  • KPM 1332 - Second Sight
  • KPM 1333 - Classical Fusion 2
  • KPM 1334 - Breath of Life
  • KPM 1335 - American Journey- Part One
  • KPM 1336 - Whimsy
  • KPM 1337 - Tradewinds
  • KPM 1338 - The Main Chance
  • KPM 1339 - Out Front
  • KPM 1340 - American Journey- Part Two
  • KPM 1341 - The Blues Collection
  • KPM 1342 - Out of the Dark
  • KPM 1343 - The Romantic Album
  • KPM 1344 - Circles
  • KPM 1345 - Atmospheric Journeys
  • KPM 1346 - Destinations
  • KPM 1347 - Compulsion
  • KPM 1348 - Achievers
  • KPM 1349 - Positive Image
  • KPM 1350 - Quest
  • KPM 1351 - Inspiration
  • KPM 1352 - First Generation
  • KPM 1353 - Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There
  • KPM 1354 - Fashion
  • KPM 1355 - Classical Concepts
  • KPM 1356 - Temple of the Stars
  • KPM 1357 - Don't Talk-Dance
  • KPM 1358 - Struttin' Out
  • KPM 1359 - 24 Hours
  • KPM 1360 - Jingles and Programme Cues- Volume 7
  • KPM 1361 - Classical Fusion 3
  • KPM 1362 - Variations on a Life
  • KPM 1363 - Power
  • KPM 1364 - Future Positive
  • KPM 1365 - The Effects Machine
  • KPM 1366 - jingles and Cues 8
  • KPM 1367 - Insight
  • KPM 1368 - Playing With Fire 1
  • KPM 1369 - Playing With Fire 2
  • KPM 1370 - Boogie and the Beat
  • KPM 1371 - Lifecycles- Part 1
  • KPM 1372 - Lifecycles- Part 2
  • KPM 1373 - The Time Machine 1
  • KPM 1374 - The Time Machine 2
  • KPM 1375 - Comedy Classics
  • KPM 1376 - Performance
  • KPM 1377 - Land of Marvels
  • KPM 1378 - Innovations
  • KPM 1379 - Fresh and Crazy
  • KPM 1380 - Information Exchange
  • KPM 1381 - Stepping Stones
  • KPM 1382 - Alchemy
  • KPM 1383 - Origins
  • KPM 1384 - The Magic Of Christmas
  • KPM 1385 - Landscapes
  • KPM 1386 - Jingles and Progamme Cues - Volume 8
  • KPM 1387 - Piano Masterclass
  • KPM 1388 - Mediaspeak
  • KPM 1389 - Shapes in Percussion
  • KPM 1390 - Altered Images
  • KPM 1391 - Archive Series- Volume 6: Light Atmosphere
  • KPM 1392 - Network Heroes
  • KPM 1393 - Piano and Orchestra 1
  • KPM 1394 - Piano and Orchestra 2

West Central College of Music

[edit]

(only any good if I find out more)

The West Central College of Music in London was founded in 1880 and situated at 25 Guilford Street, London W1 (off Russell Square) and at North Finchley. The principal was John Cross, a tenor.[1] References to the school disappear in the early 1900s.


Ernest Gillegin

[edit]

Ernest Gillegin (born 22 February 1892, retired early 1950s) was a British timpanist. He studied timpani with his father James Gillegan, who was a timpanist and a double bass player. His first professional engagement came at the age of 14, in the percussion section of a pit orchestra at the Alhambra Theatre in London. He played for many theatre productions in the West End before joining the Scottish Orchestra in 1909. The following year he was part of a world tour by the Quinlan Opera Company. There followed a 25 year period as a freelance player. In 1930 Gillegin joined the BBC Symphony Orchestra, becoming principal timpanist in 1932.[2] He played at the Coronation in 1937.[3] On 14 November 1942 he performed in the world premiere of Béla Bartók's Concerto for Two Pianos, Percussion and Orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall, alongside percussionist Frederick Bradshaw.[4] He retired in the 1950s.

List of timpanists

[edit]
  • Peter Allen - taught James Holland
  • Carlo Ántonio Boracchi (author, Manuale Pel Timpanista 1842, timpanist in the La Scala Orchestra)
  • G Gordon Cleather (lectured on the timpani at the Royal College of Organists, 1908)
  • James Bradshaw - Philharmonia, Bartok? 1950s recordings
  • Gerhard Cramer, Munich, early 1800s
  • Alan Cumberland (principal timpanist of the London Philharmonic Orchestra from 1968 to 1987)
  • Cloyd Duff - Cleveland

Fechner (1860s)

  • Alfred Friese
  • Karl Glassman
  • Saul Goodman
  • Fred Hinger - Philadelphia
  • Janos Keszei, died 2011, BBC SO
  • Ernst Pfundt (author of Die Pauken, 1849)
  • Poussard, timpanist at the Paris Opéra
  • Eric Pritchard, BBC SO (before Boulez)
  • Otto Seele, (author, Schule für Pauke, 1897)
  • Fred Sietz, (author of Modern School for Timpani)
  • Roman Szule
  • Henry Taylor (author of The Art & Science of the Timpani 1964 , Prof. of Timpani & Percussion, RCM from 1947)
  • Oscar Schwar

(gen AI - check it) Paul Turner: Principal timpanist of the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for almost 25 years. He has also performed with the London Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, and London Mozart Players. Antoine Bedewi: Principal timpanist of the BBC Symphony Orchestra since 2017. He has also performed with the London Symphony Orchestra, John Wilson Orchestra, and Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique. Bill Lockhart: Principal timpanist of the English National Opera since 1985. He has also performed with many London orchestras and contributed to film soundtracks for Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, The Hunger Game, and more. Simon Carrington: Principal timpanist of the London Philharmonic Orchestra since 2002. He has also performed with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, English Chamber Orchestra, and the World Orchestra for Peace. Antoine Sigure: Principal timpani of the Philharmonia Orchestra since 2016. He has also performed with the Aurora Orchestra, Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, and Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Jauvon Gilliam: Principal timpanist of the National Symphony Orchestra. Markus Rhoten: Principal timpani of the New York Philharmonic.

==Rudolph Dolmetsch== (8 November 1906 - December 1942) Rudolph Arnold Dolmetsch was a musician and composer, a member of the famous Dolmetsch family of musicians. He was particularly noted as a virtuoso of the Viola da Gamba and harpsichord. Dolmetsch died in the sinking of the SS Ceramic in 1942. His concerto for clarinet, harp and orchestra (1939) was revived and recorded in 2020.[5]

Dolmetsch was born in the USA (Cambridge, Massachusetts), but in 1911, at the age of four, he travelled with his family to France, and in 1914 the family moved again to England, settling in Haslemere, Surrey. His musical talent became evident in Paris, when he first played the spinet in public, aged five. By 14 he had formed a local orchestra in Haslemere.

In 1929 he married one of his viola da gamba pupils, Millicent Wheaton. They began touring together, performing recitals for viola da gamba and harpsichord. But unlike most of his family Rudolph Dolmetsch was interested in modern music as well as music for traditional instruments: he studied conducting with Constant Lambert at the Royal College of Music and submitted his orchestral composition Spring Tidings to the BBC. It was broadcast in 1936 with the composer conducting. He also formed a chamber orchestra (leader Olive Zorian), which put on its first concert in November 1938, performing works by Delius, Grieg, Haydn, Kodaly and Sibelius.[6] Two more London concerts followed, the last in February 1940.

Once war was declared Dolmetsch was called up for active service as a gunner in the Royal Artillery. In 1941, while at an anti-aircraft station in Newquay, he put on a series of local music recitals. But at the end of 1942 he was posted overseas. He was reported missing in December 1942 when his ship, the SS Ceramic - was torpedoed in the Atlantic Ocean.

When his wife Millicent died in July 1998 she bequeathed his manuscripts to the Royal College of Music.

List of works

[edit]
  • Caprice for solo viola da gamba (1929)
  • Sinfonietta for orchestra (1933)
  • Ground and Caprice for orchestra (1934)
  • Spring Tidings for orchestra (1934)
  • Symphony No. 1 in D minor (1936)
  • Symphony No. 2 in B flat (1936)
  • Pastoral Rhapsody for orchestra (1937)
  • Chinese Caprice, a fantasy on Chinese folk tunes for orchestra (1939)
  • Concerto for clarinet, harp and orchestra (1939)
  • Songs of Flight, for voice and paino (1939)
  • Concerto for viola da gamba and small orchestra (1941)
  • Symphony (two movements, conceived as a completion of Borodin's Third Symphony in A (1940-42)
  • Violin Concerto (1942)
  • Innisfallen Suite for military band (date unknown)

List of jazz venues in the United Kingdom

[edit]

This is a list of notable United Kingdom venues where jazz music is, or has been, played. It includes jazz clubs, nightclubs, dancehalls, hotels and historic venues.

  • 606 Club, originally 606 King's Road, then 90 Lots Road, Chelsea. The club opened in the 1950s as a small jazz club, turning to folk music in the 1960s before returning to jazz. Musician Steve Rubie has owned and run the club since 1976. Offering jazz, Latin, soul, R&B, blues and gospel music seven nights a week, and sometimes also on Sunday afternoons, it is one of the busiest jazz clubs in Europe.
  • Band on the Wall, 25 Swann Street, Manchester, 1970s-present. Built as a pub in the 1860s, its nickname comes from a stage built high on the far wall for bands to use in the 1930s. In 1975 local jazz musician Steve Morris turned it into a jazz club, but it also became well-known for punk and world music. It was refurbished in 2009 and enlarged in 2022.
  • Circo's, Orange Street, Leicester Square. It opened as a fashionable private restaurant club in May 1915, with Dan Kildare's Clef Club Orchestra as the resident band. In 1936 two rival bandleaders, Ambrose and Jack Harris, took a financial stake in the club in an effort to keep it going.[7] Noble Sissle's band played there in 1930, and Art Tatum in March 1938.
  • Club Eleven, 41 Great Windmill Street, then 50 Carnaby Street, 1948-1950. Opened in 1948 with two house bands: one led by Ronnie Scott, the other by John Dankworth. It moved to Caranby Street in 1950 but was closed six months later after a police raid.
  • Coconut Grove, 177 Regent Street. Popular in wartime, from 1951 it was owned by Trinidadian bandleader Edmundo Ros and renamed Edmundo Ros’s Supper and Dance Club. It closed in 1965.
  • Ealing Jazz Club, 42A, The Broadway. Opened in 1959 with an emphasis on blues, R&B and later rock. Now a nightclub called The Red Room.
  • Embassy Club, 6-8 Old Bond Street. One of the first nightclubs to be established in London. Benny Peyton's The Jazz Kings - for a while including Sidney Bechet - were the resident jazz band from December 1919 to August 1920. Jazz and dance bands continued to play there until the 1950s, with Ambrose as the music director from 1922-1924 and again from 1933 until 1936. Reginald Foresythe led an eight piece resident band there in 1939-1940.
  • The Four Bars Inn (later Dempseys, now Elevens Bar & Grill), 15 Castle Street, Cardiff. Founded by Jed Williams (of the Brecon Jazz Festival), The Four Bars hosted a house band called the Root Doctors and featured live jazz seven days a week for many years.
  • Fullado Club, 6 New Compton Street. From 1945 it was the venue for British bebop musicians, with many of those later associated with Club Eleven performing there, though they were not paid. It was raided by police and closed down in 1947.[9]
  • Grosvenor House Hotel, 86–90 Park Lane. Dance music was first relayed from the hotel for BBC national broadcasts in 1929, conducted by American bandleader Jack Harris. Sydney Lipton took over as resident bandleader from 1933 to 1940, returning after the war and staying until 1967.
  • Hammersmith Palais, 242 Shepherd's Bush Road. Opened in 1919 and operated until 2007, it was the first purpose-built dance hall, or "palais de danse" to be built in Britain. Nick LaRocca's Original Dixieland Jazz Band played on its first night. Adelaide Hall performed there in 1939. Joe Loss and his Orchestra were the house band from 1959 for a decade.
  • The May Fair Hotel, Berkeley Street, Stratton Street. The Crystal room was the venue for ballroom dances attended by royals and elites. The Ambrose band was resident from 1927 to 1933, making fortnightly broadcasts from the ballroom. Ambrose returned between 1937 and 1940.
  • Murray's Cabaret Club, Beak Street, Soho. Opened in 1913, it hired the black American banjoist/vocalist Gus Haston. Murray's had a restaurant on the ground floor and a large, wooden-panelled ballroom below. In the late 1930s it reopened at a different location, 16-18 Beak Street.[10]
  • The Old Duke, 45 King Street, Bristol. Known for live trad jazz since the late 1960s, the pub now also hosts blues, folk and modern jazz players. It puts on its own annual jazz festival.
  • The Perch, Binsey Lane, Oxford. 17th Century pub near the Thames. From 1928 to 1948 it was popular with students as a jazz venue.
  • Prince of Orange, 118 Lower Road, Rotherhithe. Pub well known in the 1970s and 1980s as a jazz venue. Loose Tubes performed their first gig there. It was closed in 2000 and converted into flats.
  • Savoy Hotel, Strand. The hotel established its first dinner dances in 1912, laying a dance-floor in the centre of the Thames Foyer in time to take advantage of the popularity of the tango, which exploded in 1913. After the war came the Savoy Havana Band and the Savoy Orpheans dance band, led by Debroy Somers. In 1931 Carroll Gibbons took over as leader of the Orpheans, staying until 1950.
  • The Shim Sham Club, 37, Wardour St, London. Soho club opened in 1935 as a bottle club, popular with black, Jewish and LGBTQ+ patrons. Benny Carter, Nat Gonella, and Fats Waller, played there while Garland Wilson, was leader of the resident band. It was short-lived: other clubs soon took over at the same venue.

(TO DO)

  • Embassy Club. It was established at the same time as Murray’s at the end of 1913 as the 400 club. Its success is partly down to the presiding genius of Luigi, a small alert personality, who took over the club just after the war and made it extremely fashionable as the Embassy. Need to distinguish it from 1978 founded disco club - same address? Revisit, check address


The Jamaican landlord Gus Leslie opened the Sunset Club at the same address (50 Carneby St) in 1951, and it became a popular venue for black US Army personnel still posted in London. Joe Harriott made his London debut at the club in 1951, and Lionel Hampton appeared in 1957. The Count Basie Orchestra and Sarah Vaughan also performed here. The club closed in 1958 when the lease expired.[5]

  • Feldman Swing Club, 100 Oxford Street, London, 1942-1954. Opened in 1942 by Joseph Feldman as a showcase for his jazz-prodigy children, the Feldman Swing Club was the first club in London to play jazz exclusively.
  • Hippodrome, Cranbourn Street, London, 1900-1983. Hosted the UK's first official jazz gig, by the ODJB, in 1919.

Western Hotel, St Ives

Bromley Jazz Club - see Joe Mudele

Sources: Brecon Jazz Festival jazz venue poll, 2012 - The Standard, 12 April 2012 Dave Haslam: Life After Dark (2015)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Advertisement, St. Pancras Guardian and Camden and Kentish Towns Reporter, 31 March 1888
  2. ^ Russell Palmer. British Music (1947), pp. 101-2
  3. ^ 'The Coronation: Music and Musicians', in The Musical Times, Vol. 78, No. 1132 (June 1937), pp. 497-501
  4. ^ 'Classified Advertising', The Daily Telegraph, 14 November 1992
  5. ^ Rediscovered: British Clarinet Concertos, Signum Classics SIGCD656 (2020)
  6. ^ The Observer Nov 1938
  7. ^ Melody Maker, Vol XII, No 184, 28 November 1936, front page
  8. ^ Dave Haslam, Life After Dark (2015)
  9. ^ Ray Kinsella. The Bebop Scene in London's Soho, 1945-1950: Post-war Britain’s First Youth Subculture, Palgrave Studies in the History of Subcultures and Popular Music (2022), p.61
  10. ^ "Murray's Night Club". Jazz Age Club. Retrieved 31 December 2019.

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See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

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